At its peak in the mid-2010s, the Romance Writers of America had around 10,000 members. Ekaterina Markelova/iStock via Getty Images
by Christine Larson, University of...
Netflix/ABC
by Rebecca Trelease, Auckland University of Technology
Television producer and screenwriter Shonda Rhimes has come a long way since being a scriptwriter for the 2002...
by Hugh Breakey, Griffith University
Must we accommodate political differences in our closest relationships? Or should politics and doing what’s right trump love and happiness?
These...
by Kate G. Blackburn, The University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts; Leah E. LeFebvre, University of Alabama, and Nick Brody, University...
by Riki Thompson, University of Washington
Heterosexual dating conventions have long held that men make the first move: first to flirt, first to ask out...
MEGHAN LASLOCKY (CNN Photo) by Meghan Laslocky (CNN) -- Kristen Stewart, Ryan Phillippe, LeAnn Rimes, Jude Law, Mark Sanford and Bill Clinton. What do they have in common? Many are quick to label a person who strays from his or her marriage or relationship as a "cheater," but it's really not that simple. It's time for our culture to wake up and smell the sex pheromones: monogamy is not natural for many, or probably even most, humans.
This CD cover image released by Concord Jazz shows "Except Sometimes," by Molly Ringwald. (AP Photo/Concord Jazz) by Charles J. Gans NEW YORK (AP) — Molly Ringwald has moved from "The Breakfast Club" to the jazz club. The redheaded actress who describes herself as "your former teen-age crush" in her Twitter bio will always live in her generation's memories for portraying the angst of high school life as an everyday girl, teen princess and outsider in her iconic 1980s films "Sixteen Candles," ''The Breakfast Club," and "Pretty In Pink" with writer-director John Hughes. Now the 45-year-old has taken on a new role as a jazz singer with the release last month of her album "Except Sometimes," a collection of Great American Songbook and Broadway tunes.